The electricity at home has gone out twice in 2008 for longer than 6 hours. One was multiple days. Another was about 12 hours.
My husband now is completely paranoid about the power going out. I can’t afford to buy a generator, but I would like things that would make him feel a little better prepared if the power does go out.
I saw a dynamo lantern that I thought might make him happy. Anyone have other ideas?
You can pick up propane camping stoves for a reasonable price. It sounds like a Hurricane kit would have the supplies you’d need. You can find a checklist online here.
Flashlight plus radio, what’s not to love? We actually use them when we’re yard-working, also. And they did come in handy for the big ice storm last year, when power was out for a couple days.
I’d go for the shake ones. I’ve never used them, but I have a crank one and it’s really not much use–it quickly got to the point where I just couldn’t get a decent amount of light out of it for more than about ten seconds. It’s the thing you use while you try and find a real flashlight.
We have re-chargeable flashlights that plug directly into the socket on every level ( or they are suppose to be) and when we lose power ( a couple times a year) it is a comfort to know they are suppose to be in those stupid plugs.
One of those head flashlights ( Which range from $50 and up) are loads of fun when you are reading a book on the couch and the power is out. You can find cheaper and just as good headlight thingies at Kmart/Walmart/ and the like in the camping section for under $20. ( we all have them.)
Just a portable radio with batteries can last a long time. My mom has used a transistor radio that predates GOD ok, that’s a stretch but this radio is easily 50 years old and is trotted out importantly every time the power goes.
But, Men do like their gadgets, so get him a gadget.
I spend a lot of time with people who do not have electricity in their homes (in Africa), so I know a few things about not having electricity. What are his biggest concerns?
Solar flashlights are very useful. I think they are much more convenient than the cranked or pumped ones- you don’t need to interrupt what you are doing when you are using it. I use mine all the time even when the electricity works. Headlamps are also pretty hip with the no-lights set. For general lighting, candles or kerosene lamps are still the best long term solution.
The hand-cranked radios are universally pretty crappy as radios. They aren’t tools, they are toys.
In my opinion the money is best spent on a decent portable shortwave radio, a lightweight antennae, a box of batteries, and a copy of the indispensable"Passport to World Band Radio." Finding obscure broadcasts from all over the world was one of my favorite pass times when the lights were out- it’s almost as fun as the internet. From the biggies like the BBC and RFI to faint whisps caught from North Korea and Somalia, it was all completely fascinating. Anyway, the cranked radios won’t be able to pick up the quieter and more interesting signals. And you’ll never find them without the book.
The “Passport to World Band Radio” has very good radio reviews and is the authoritative guide. Buy it first, and then buy their recommended budget portable radio. I promise he’ll love it.
Both types are crap. Instead, get him a bunch of LED flashlights. I’ve found all sorts available online, and they are very inexpensive. Mine take 3 AAA batteries each for a 9 LED array, and really kick out the lumens.
One of these is also cool. We have one stashed in the spare bedroom, just in case.
As for sustenance, skip the MREs and go for these.
I’m afraid I don’t have anything to add, but I wanted to know if I was the only one who, at first glance, read the thread title as, “Help with X-mas gifts for someone afraid of losing their virginity?”
Frankly, I think he’s being a bit of a spaz because he acts like being without power for a couple of hours is the end of the world. When I was a kid, our power went out all the time, so I got more used to the idea. We always used to joke that the power went out whenever a cloud went over.
He’s never lived anywhere like that, so he gets overly worked up.
I’m hoping that some supplies and things will make him able to calm down about it.
The short-wave radio idea is a great one, but he’s a ham and the one thing I’ve learned over the years is never ever EVER to buy him anything that remotely resembles anything that remotely touches on radios. I’ll have to listen to him telling me why what I bought wasn’t the right thing for 10 years.